Diffuse axonal injury (DAI) is a
brain injury in which scattered
lesions occur over a widespread area in
white matter
White matter refers to areas of the central nervous system that are mainly made up of myelinated axons, also called Nerve tract, tracts. Long thought to be passive tissue, white matter affects learning and brain functions, modulating the distr ...
tracts as well as
grey matter.
DAI is one of the most common and devastating types of
traumatic brain injury and is a major cause of unconsciousness and
persistent vegetative state
A vegetative state (VS) or post-coma unresponsiveness (PCU) is a disorder of consciousness in which patients with severe brain damage are in a state of partial arousal rather than true awareness. After four weeks in a vegetative state, the patie ...
after severe head trauma.
[Wasserman J. and Koenigsberg R.A. (2007)]
Diffuse axonal injury
Emedicine.com. Retrieved on 2008-01-26. It occurs in about half of all cases of severe
head trauma and may be the primary damage that occurs in
concussion. The outcome is frequently
coma, with over 90% of patients with severe DAI never regaining consciousness.
Those who awaken from the coma often remain significantly impaired.
[Vinas F.C. and Pilitsis J. (2006)]
Penetrating head trauma
Emedicine.com. Retrieved on 2008-01-14.
DAI can occur across the spectrum of traumatic brain injury (TBI) severity, wherein the burden of injury increases from mild to severe.
Concussion may be a milder type of diffuse axonal injury.
Mechanism
DAI is the result of
traumatic shearing forces that occur when the head is rapidly accelerated or decelerated, as may occur in car accidents, falls, and assaults. Vehicle accidents are the most frequent cause of DAI; it can also occur as the result of
child abuse such as in
shaken baby syndrome.
[Smith D. and Greenwald B. 200]
Management and staging of traumatic brain injury
Emedicine.com. Retrieved through web archive on 17 January 2008.
Immediate disconnection of
axon
An axon (from Greek ἄξων ''áxōn'', axis) or nerve fiber (or nerve fibre: see American and British English spelling differences#-re, -er, spelling differences) is a long, slender cellular extensions, projection of a nerve cell, or neuron, ...
s may be observed in severe brain injury, but the major damage of DAI is delayed secondary axon disconnections, slowly developed over an extended time course.
Tracts of axons, which appear white due to
myelination, are referred to as
white matter
White matter refers to areas of the central nervous system that are mainly made up of myelinated axons, also called Nerve tract, tracts. Long thought to be passive tissue, white matter affects learning and brain functions, modulating the distr ...
. Lesions in both grey and white matter are found in postmortem brains in CT and MRI exams.
Besides mechanical breakage of the axonal
cytoskeleton, DAI pathology also includes secondary physiological changes, such as interrupted axonal transport, progressive swellings known as
axonal varicosities, and degeneration.
Recent studies have linked these changes to twisting and misalignment of broken axon
microtubules, as well as
tau protein and
amyloid precursor protein (APP) deposition.
Characteristics
Lesions typically are found in the
white matter
White matter refers to areas of the central nervous system that are mainly made up of myelinated axons, also called Nerve tract, tracts. Long thought to be passive tissue, white matter affects learning and brain functions, modulating the distr ...
of brains injured by DAI; these lesions vary in size from about 1–15 mm and are distributed in a characteristic pattern.
DAI most commonly affects white matter in areas including the
brain stem, the
corpus callosum, and the
cerebral hemispheres.
The
lobes of the brain most likely to be injured are the frontal and temporal lobes.
Other common locations for DAI include the white matter in the
cerebral cortex, the superior
cerebral peduncles,
basal ganglia,
thalamus, and deep hemispheric nuclei.
These areas may be more easily damaged because of the difference in density between them and the other regions of the brain.
Histological characteristics
DAI is characterized by axonal separation, in which the axon is torn at the site of stretch and the part
distal to the tear degrades by a process known as
Wallerian degeneration. While it was once thought that the main cause of axonal separation was tearing due to mechanical forces during the trauma event, it is now understood that axons are not typically torn upon impact; rather, secondary
biochemical cascades, which occur in response to the
primary injury (which occurs as the result of mechanical forces at the moment of trauma) and take place hours to days after the initial injury, are largely responsible for the damage to axons.
Though the processes involved in secondary brain injury are still poorly understood, it is now accepted that stretching of axons during injury causes physical disruption to and
proteolytic degradation of the
cytoskeleton.
It also opens
sodium channels in the
axolemma, which causes
voltage-gated calcium channels to open and Ca
2+ to flow into the cell.
The intracellular presence of Ca
2+ triggers several different pathways, including activating
phospholipases and
proteolytic enzymes damaging
mitochondria and the cytoskeleton, and activating
secondary messengers, which can lead to separation of the axon and death of the cell.
Cytoskeleton disruption

Axons are normally elastic, but when rapidly stretched they become brittle, and the axonal
cytoskeleton can be broken. Misalignment of cytoskeletal elements after stretch injury can lead to tearing of the axon and death of the neuron.
Axonal transport continues up to the point of the break in the cytoskeleton, but no further, leading to a buildup of transport products and local swelling at that point.
When this swelling becomes large enough, it can tear the axon at the site of the cytoskeleton break, causing it to draw back toward the cell body and form a bulb.
This bulb is called a "retraction ball", the
histological hallmark of diffuse axonal injury.
When the axon is torn,
Wallerian degeneration, in which the part of the axon distal to the break degrades, takes place within one to two days after injury.
The axolemma disintegrates,
myelin breaks down and begins to detach from the cell in an anterograde direction (from the body of the cell toward the end of the axon),
and nearby cells begin
phagocytic activity, engulfing the cellular debris.
Calcium influx
While sometimes only the cytoskeleton is disturbed, frequently disruption of the
axolemma occurs as well, causing the influx of
Ca2+ ions into the cell and unleashing a variety of degradational processes.
An increase in Ca
2+ and
Na+ levels and a drop in
K+ levels are found within the axon immediately after injury.
Possible routes of Ca
2+ entry include
sodium channels,
pores formed in the membrane during stretch, and failure of
ATP-dependent transporters due to mechanical blockage or lack of available metabolic energy.
High levels of intracellular Ca
2+, the major cause of post-injury cell damage,
destroy mitochondria,
and trigger
phospholipases and proteolytic enzymes that damage Na+ channels and degrade or alter the cytoskeleton and the
axoplasm.
Excess Ca
2+ can also lead to damage to the
blood–brain barrier and swelling of the brain.
One of the proteins activated by the presence of calcium in the cell is
calpain, a Ca
2+-dependent non-
lysosomal protease.
About 15 minutes to half an hour after the onset of injury, a process called calpain-mediated spectrin proteolysis, or CMSP, begins to occur.
Calpain breaks down a molecule called
spectrin, which holds the membrane onto the cytoskeleton, causing the formation of
blebs and the breakdown of the cytoskeleton and the membrane, and ultimately the death of the cell.
Other molecules that can be degraded by calpains are
microtubule subunits,
microtubule-associated proteins, and
neurofilaments.
Generally occurring one to six hours into the process of post-stretch injury, the presence of calcium in the cell initiates the
caspase cascade, a process in cell injury that usually leads to
apoptosis
Apoptosis (from ) is a form of programmed cell death that occurs in multicellular organisms and in some eukaryotic, single-celled microorganisms such as yeast. Biochemistry, Biochemical events lead to characteristic cell changes (Morphology (biol ...
, or "programmed cell death".
Mitochondria,
dendrites, and parts of the cytoskeleton damaged in the injury have a limited ability to heal and regenerate, a process which occurs over two or more weeks.
After the injury,
astrocytes can shrink, causing parts of the brain to atrophy.
Diagnosis

DAI is difficult to detect since it does not show up well on
CT scan
A computed tomography scan (CT scan), formerly called computed axial tomography scan (CAT scan), is a medical imaging technique used to obtain detailed internal images of the body. The personnel that perform CT scans are called radiographers or ...
s or with other macroscopic imaging techniques, though it shows up microscopically.
However, there are characteristics typical of DAI that may or may not show up on a CT scan. Diffuse injury has more microscopic injury than macroscopic injury and is difficult to detect with CT and MRI, but its presence can be inferred when small bleeds are visible in the
corpus callosum or the
cerebral cortex.
[
] MRI is more useful than CT for detecting characteristics of diffuse axonal injury in the subacute and chronic time frames.
Newer studies such as
Diffusion Tensor Imaging are able to demonstrate the degree of white matter fiber tract injury even when the standard MRI is negative. Since axonal damage in DAI is largely a result of secondary
biochemical cascades, it has a delayed onset, so a person with DAI who initially appears well may deteriorate later. Thus injury is frequently more severe than is realized, and medical professionals should suspect DAI in any patients whose CT scans appear normal but who have symptoms like
unconsciousness.
MRI is more sensitive than CT scans, but is still liable to
false negatives because DAI is identified by looking for signs of
edema, which may not always be present.
DAI is classified into grades based on severity of the injury. In Grade I, widespread axonal damage is present but no focal abnormalities are seen. In Grade II, damage found in Grade I is present in addition to focal abnormalities, especially in the corpus callosum. Grade III damage encompasses both Grades I and II plus
rostral brain stem injury and often tears in the tissue.
Treatment
DAI currently lacks specific treatment beyond that for any type of
head injury, which includes stabilizing the patient and trying to limit increases in
intracranial pressure (ICP).
History
The idea of DAI first came about as a result of studies by
Sabina Strich on lesions of the white matter of individuals who had sustained head trauma years before.
[
] Strich first proposed the idea in 1956, calling it ''diffuse degeneration of white matter''; however, the more concise term "diffuse axonal injury" came to be preferred.
[
] Strich was researching the relationship between dementia and head trauma
and asserted in 1956 that DAI played an integral role in the eventual development of dementia due to head trauma.
[
] The term DAI was introduced in the early 1980s.
Notable examples
* ''
Top Gear'' presenter
Richard Hammond sustained a DAI as a result of the
''Vampire'' dragster crash in 2006.
*
Champ Car World Series driver
Roberto Guerrero suffered a DAI as a result of a crash during testing at the
Indianapolis Motor Speedway in
1987.
*
Formula 1 driver
Jules Bianchi suffered a DAI as a result of an accident at the
2014 Japanese Grand Prix and died without regaining consciousness 9 months later.
* Actor and audiobook narrator
Frank Muller, who read
Stephen King
Stephen Edwin King (born September 21, 1947) is an American author. Dubbed the "King of Horror", he is widely known for his horror novels and has also explored other genres, among them Thriller (genre), suspense, crime fiction, crime, scienc ...
's
''The Dark Tower'', suffered a DAI in 2001 due to a
motorcycle accident. He died in 2008.
*
NASCAR driver
Adam Petty, grandson of seven time Cup Series champion
Richard Petty, sustained a diffuse axonal injury secondary to a fatal
basilar skull fracture in May 2000 at
New Hampshire Motor Speedway during practice for the upcoming race.
See also
*
Brain injury
*
Axoplasmic transport
References
External links
Diffuse Axonal InjuryMRI and CT Images
{{DEFAULTSORT:Diffuse Axonal Injury
Neurotrauma
Coma